One of Jamaica’s most well-known secondary institutions, Jamaica College (JC), is once again at the center of public controversy after a graphic video showing multiple uniformed JC students violently assaulting a fellow student spread widely across social media platforms. In an official statement released late Monday afternoon, signed by JC Board Chairman Lance Hylton, school administrators confirmed that every student identified in the viral footage will be summoned before the school’s disciplinary committee to face action aligned with the institution’s established internal procedures.
Hylton outlined that school leadership first learned of the disturbing incident around 8:00 pm on Saturday, April 18. “The behaviour depicted in the video is reprehensible and completely unacceptable, and we condemn it in the strongest possible terms,” the statement read. Immediately after becoming aware of the footage, administrators launched an internal investigation following official school protocols. By midday Sunday, April 19, investigators had identified all students appearing in the video and built an initial working understanding of the events that led to the altercation.
On Monday, all primary parties involved in the incident were interviewed alongside their legal guardians, and formal signed statements were collected from each participant. Based on these statements, the assault was triggered by an unresolved dispute over stolen personal property. The student targeted in the attack admitted in writing that approximately two weeks prior to the altercation, he took a jacket, a pair of glasses, and an undisclosed sum of money from a group of fellow students he was socializing with. After initially denying any involvement when the items went missing, he later acknowledged taking the belongings and agreed to return all items and the missing money. However, he only returned a portion of what he took and missed multiple agreed deadlines to complete restitution.
On the day of the attack, the students who lost their property confronted the victim on school grounds to demand the outstanding restitution, and the violent altercation captured in the video broke out during that confrontation. The viral footage shows one assailant grabbing the victim by the shirt, landing repeated open-handed slaps to the face and a blow to the chest, while a second attacker struck the victim with a belt.
Early reports shared with the Jamaica Observer claimed that one of the students involved in the assault had been taken into police custody during a Monday morning police visit to the school campus. But law enforcement officials later clarified that as of Monday evening, when the press was preparing its final coverage, no students had been arrested in connection with the incident.
This latest incident comes as Jamaica College has been in the public eye for mixed reasons in recent weeks. Just weeks ago, the school celebrated two major, historic victories: it claimed the Mortimer Geddes Trophy as the top boys’ school at the 2026 ISSA/GraceKennedy Boys’ and Girls’ Athletics Championships, and just days later, broke a 39-year championship drought by winning the 2026 TVJ Schools’ Challenge Quiz title.
But even amid those celebrations, the school was already facing public scrutiny over a separate violent assault that took place on March 24. In that earlier incident, one student was injured and another was arrested on assault charges. The injured student’s mother publicly spoke out on social media, expressing her anger and revealing that her child’s medical costs had already climbed to a quarter million Jamaican dollars, with treatment still ongoing. JC responded to that incident by refuting claims that the injured student had been attacked by a school gang, explaining that the violence stemmed from a dispute over a $2,000 Jamaican dollar note that both students claimed belonged to them.
The school’s Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) has also pushed back against widespread speculation that Jamaica College has an underlying culture of gang violence and bullying, calling those claims entirely false. “The PTA takes its responsibility to safeguard the welfare of its children very seriously, and would be among the first to raise concern and demand accountability if such conditions existed,” the PTA said in a previous statement. “Where isolated incidents may arise, as they can in any school environment, the PTA is satisfied that the institution has in place a structured, responsive, and effective system in place to address them.”
Following the release of the new viral assault video, Jamaica’s Ministry of Education and Youth announced Monday that it had launched its own independent investigation into the incident. The ministry described the footage as “disturbing”, issued a strong condemnation of the violence shown, and reaffirmed its official zero-tolerance policy for all forms of bullying and school violence. As part of the ongoing probe, the ministry will deploy specialized support and investigation teams to the campus to meet with school leadership and students. Officials added that they are working closely with JC administration to identify all parties involved and ensure that appropriate disciplinary and corrective measures are implemented.
